A low cost/high efficiency passive radiator module component includes: a ported cavity structure adapted for placement inside an acoustic enclosure with a port communicating out of the acoustic enclosure and one or more pairs of passive radiators symmetrically oriented and supported on opposing side walls of the ported cavity each having a predetermined or tuned mass distribution, stiff acoustic radiating diaphragm surfaces, and spaced apart inner and outer suspensions configured to suppress diaphragm wobble that induces each pair to symmetrically vibrate inertially responsive to variable sound pressure pulses originating from an active acoustic radiator within the acoustic enclosure. different variable acoustic pressure pulses may be detected inside and outside the ported cavity; the constricting horn connecting to the ported cavity from outside may be tuned by horn loading to achieve a desired effect.
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29. A passive acoustic radiator module component comprising:
a ported cavity structure adapted for placement inside an acoustic enclosure, to receive ±pressures from an air spring, the ported cavity structure being closed except for a horn structure open to the outside having a throat section providing pressure resistance creating a different variable acoustic pressure inside and outside the throat section, the ported cavity structure having an inner space surrounded by a plurality of walls and the mouth opening,
wherein a radiating surface is suspended from at least one of said plurality of walls using a suspension surround arrangement.
5. A passive acoustic radiator module component comprising:
a ported cavity structure adapted for placement inside an acoustic enclosure, to receive ±pressures from an air spring, the ported cavity structure having a horn structure having a throat section with a mouth section communicating out of the acoustic enclosure, the throat section providing pressure resistance creating a different variable acoustic pressure inside and outside the throat section, the ported cavity structure having an inner space surrounded by a plurality of walls and a mouth opening,
wherein a radiating surface is suspended from at least one of said plurality of walls using a suspension surround arrangement.
1. A passive acoustic radiator module comprising:
a ported cavity structure adapted for placement inside an acoustic enclosure, to receive ±pressures from an air spring, the ported cavity structure being closed except for a horn structure having a throat section with a mouth section communicating out of the acoustic enclosure, the throat section providing pressure resistance creating a different variable acoustic pressure inside and outside the throat section, the ported cavity structure having a plurality of walls and an opening therein,
wherein, said opening is configured to be positioned in and sealed to a module receiving opening in the acoustic enclosure in which said module is to be operated and at least two substantially matched symmetrical acoustic radiating surfaces fixed to radiators having a predetermined mass distribution are suspended in at least two walls of said plurality of walls so that vibration of these at least two radiating surfaces cause a sound pressure level change through said opening.
15. A passive radiator module mountable in an acoustic enclosure comprising:
a ported cavity structure adapted for placement inside an acoustic enclosure, to receive ±pressures from an air spring, the ported cavity structure being closed except for a horn structure having a throat section with a mouth section communicating out of the acoustic enclosure, the throat section providing pressure resistance creating a different variable acoustic pressure inside and outside the throat section, the ported cavity structure having an inner space surrounded by a plurality of walls and a mouth opening,
wherein a radiating surface is suspended from at least one of said plurality of walls using a suspension surround arrangement;
an active acoustic radiator, capable of radiating variable acoustic pressure pulses within the acoustic enclosure for enhancing acoustic output comprising, in combination:
a walled structure having a cavity therein, the walled structure having a radiator wall of a predetermined mass suspended within a flexible surround,
whereby, said radiator wall is induced to vibrate responsive to variable acoustic pressure pulses radiated by the active acoustic radiator within said acoustic enclosure.
2. The passive acoustic radiator module as in claim in 1, further comprising:
a wobble reduction tuning mass fixed to each one of said radiators of said at least two acoustic radiating surfaces, wherein a center of gravity of each said wobble reduction tuning mass fixed to each one of said radiators of said at least two acoustic radiating surfaces is offset a predetermined distance from a geometric center of said at least two radiating surfaces toward said opening of acoustic radiator module.
3. The passive acoustic radiator module as in claim in 2, wherein the space between a smallest constriction area of said opening and the radiating surfaces defines a horn loaded volume.
4. The passive acoustic radiator module as in
6. The passive acoustic radiator module component as in claim in 5, wherein, said radiating surface of said suspension surround arrangement has suspension locations spaced apart in a direction along a radiating axis of said radiating surface.
7. The passive acoustic radiator module component as in claim in 6, wherein, a sound radiating system includes said passive acoustic radiator module component mounted therein.
8. The passive acoustic radiator module component as in claim in 5, wherein said suspension surround arrangement includes an internal suspension closer to a center of said acoustic radiator module component than an external suspension, where the internal suspension is made of a slim profile material.
9. The passive acoustic radiator module component as in claim in 8, wherein said slim profile material of said internal suspension comprises a spider configured as a series of concentric waves forms emanating from a center wherein a side surface of an imaginary envelope of said spider is substantially planar.
10. The passive acoustic radiator module component of
11. The passive acoustic radiator module component of
12. The passive acoustic radiator module component of
13. The passive acoustic radiator module component as in
wherein the ported cavity structure is closed except for a horn structure having a throat section with a mouth section communicating out of the acoustic enclosure.
14. The passive acoustic radiator module component as in
wherein the radiating surface is suspended from at least one of said plurality of walls using a dual suspension surround arrangement.
16. The passive radiator module of
17. The passive radiator module of
a rigid partition symmetrically dividing said cavity in said walled structure into two isolated cavities each having one of said two radiator walls configured to preclude the different variable pressure pulses radiated by one of said two radiator walls from affecting the vibrations of the other of said two radiator walls across said cavity.
18. The passive radiator module as in
19. The passive radiator module of
21. The passive radiator module of
22. The passive radiator module of
a rigid partition symmetrically dividing said cavity in said walled structure into two isolated cavities each having one of said two radiator walls configured to preclude the different variable pressure pulses radiated by one of said two radiator walls from affecting the vibrations of the other of said two radiator walls across said cavity.
23. The passive radiator module as in
24. The passive radiator module of
27. The passive radiator module of
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This application is a continuation-in-part application of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 62/167,713 entitled: “Passive Acoustic Radiator Module,” filed on May 28, 2015, by Joseph Y. Sahyoun.
The present invention relates generally to full range speaker, woofer and subwoofer acoustic enclosures incorporating an woofer or subwoofer and passive acoustic radiator elements having resonance frequencies that range from 200 Hz to below audible levels (10 Hz) and, in particular, to mass-loaded, symmetrically positioned passive radiator elements in one or more horn loaded modules in the speaker enclosure to provide improved and enhanced audible viscerally-sensed bass frequency output from any woofer enclosure.
Ported acoustic enclosures driven by active acoustic radiators, e.g. a woofer speaker, provide louder (greater amplitude) output sound than sealed acoustic enclosures driven by similar active acoustic radiators because the air mass moving within the port provides greater sound pressure levels (SPL) at the tuning or resonant frequency of the driving woofer speaker. However, at output sound frequencies different than the tuning frequency, the configuration of ported enclosures cause cancellation of part of the SPL produced by the woofer speaker. This is due to a phase shift in the frequency of the sound between the frequency generated by the woofer's and its moving air mass and the sound frequency present within the ports and their moving masses, due to the SPL gradient which is highest at the surface of the sound generator (the woofer speaker) and the ambient SPL outside the speaker enclosure. Woofers typically have narrow bandwidths filtering to achieve maximum SPL in a range between 30 Hz to 80 Hz.
Passive radiators have been used in woofer and subwoofer enclosures for many years, principally to improve the quantity of and quality of bass frequencies generated by woofer and subwoofer acoustic enclosures. From a design or analytical standpoint passive radiators behave are modeled exactly like a port in an acoustic enclosure, providing an inertial mass equivalent to an air mass of a port to boost the response of an active radiator (woofer) driving the enclosure in a resonance frequency range, and running out of phase above and below that resonance frequency range.
Prior art designs of woofer and subwoofer acoustic enclosures augmented with passive radiators have not considered spring resistance noncompliance, i.e. kinetic energy-in (Kin) vs. kinetic energy-out (Kout). For example, air volume (number of molecules) within an acoustic enclosure is fixed and volumetric distortion of a wall (or limit) causes the contained air mass to essentially function as an elastic air spring coupling the active woofer and the passive radiator mounted within the enclosure. To get work from the passive radiator, the woofer, as the driving radiator, elastically vibrates in and out (creating a localized volumetric change within the closed enclosure) compressing the air (spring) within the acoustic enclosure that in turn creates a pressure force to drive elastically deformable portions (surfaces) of the passive radiator in an in and out vibrational frequency which is typically lower than the frequency of the driving radiator, the lower frequency of the passive radiator is attributable to the time delay in the motion of the inertial mass of the passive radiator as the pressure waves travel through the air (spring) within the enclosure. Sound pressure levels (SPL) inside and outside the acoustic enclosure maximize when the vibrational motion of the moving elements of: the active woofer move out and in and the passive radiator move in and out at the same time, i.e., harmonically. Since air is trapped in the acoustic enclosure, the in and out vibration of the passive radiator impacts the centering, relative to a top plate, of the voice coil of the active woofer and harmonic distortion occurs when the spring constants of the in and out strokes are different. Also, while passive radiators inertially react to the air pressure vibrations of the active woofer, they vibrate at a lower frequency.
In his U.S. Pat. No. 6,044,925, Sahyoun, U.S. Pat. No. 6,460,651, Sahyoun U.S. Pat. No. 6,626,263, Sahyoun U.S. Pat. No. 7,318,496, Sahyoun U.S. Pat. No. 7,360,626 Sahyoun and U.S. Pat. No. 8,204,269, Sahyoun, the Applicant Sahyoun teaches a necessity for, and advantages of symmetrically loaded suspension systems for both active and passive acoustic radiator systems characterized as Symmetrically Loaded Audio Passive Systems or SLAPS.
Prior disclosures by the inventor herein recognized that the normal audio spectrum detectable by the human ear ranges from 25 Hz to 12 kHz. That the transition between 20 to 25 Hz is sub audible/audible and that if a passive radiator is tuned to below 20 Hz, then the phase shift (group delay) inherent in passive tuned enclosure containing such a passive radiator will be below audible. Furthermore, when using passive radiators having certain compliance values the moving elements in the passive and the active radiators can be made to vibrate 180° out of phase so that the mass of combined moving elements in the passive and active radiators generate vibrations that likely to be viscerally sensed by a listener. (Compliance or Cms is measured in meters per Newton. Cms is the force exerted by the mechanical suspension of the speaker. It is simply a measurement of its stiffness. Considering stiffness (Cms), in conjunction with the Q parameters (related to the control of a transducer's suspension when it reaches the resonant frequency gives rise to the kind of subjective decisions made by car manufacturers when tuning cars between comfort to carry the president and precision to go racing. Think of the peaks and valleys of audio signals like a road surface then consider that the ideal speaker suspension is like car suspension that can traverse the rockiest terrain with race-car precision and sensitivity at the speed of a fighter plane. It's quite a challenge because focusing on any one discipline tends to have a detrimental effect on the others.) For example, the harmonic frequency of an “E note” of a bass guitar is about 41.2 Hz at harmonic. Depending how far a listener is from the source, he or she will viscerally sense resonance frequencies as low as 15 Hz from a source that has a fundamental source frequency of 41.2 Hz. The generation of such sub audible mechanical vibrations effectively brings a listener to center stage providing sensation of audible frequencies combined with a nice blend of low frequency vibrations below audible which can likely be detected by skin and other nerve ending detectors (sensors) of the human body.
In addition a primary factor compromising synchronous and ideal resonant frequency generation of a passive radiator in acoustic systems is group delay, i.e. the frequency/time response of the system. A slower passive radiator response muddies bass response of an acoustic cavity. Summarizing, prior art originating with the inventor herein teaches that acoustic systems that include a single passive radiator can be tuned to below audible frequencies, for shifting the group delay response to a frequency range below the human hearing threshold.
However, in acoustic enclosures where two or more passive radiators are driven by a common active or a common monaural driven active radiator, other parameters effectively preclude a true bass audio response. In particular, mounting passive radiator modules with two or passive radiators acoustically coupling the interior volume of an acoustic enclosure with “a cavity located inside the acoustic enclosure having an opening to outside the acoustic enclosure”, i.e., a ported cavity as taught in U.S. Pat. No. 7,133,533, Chick, et al. and related U.S. Pat. No. 8,031,896, Chick, et al. & U.S. Pat. No. 8,594,358, Litovsky et al. are not easily tuned to provide an acceptable audible bass response much less a nuanced blend of sub-audibly sensed vibrations.
In particular, passive radiators never have identical compliance values, nor do they experience the same environmental loading in an acoustic enclosure, hence they have different resonance frequencies, one for each passive radiator and one for the active driving radiator. Audio sweeps of frequency vs. impedance in acoustic systems having a plurality of commonly driven passive radiators produce more than one peak impedance values, one for the active or driving radiator (normal) and one for each passive radiator. Such systems also have additional peak impedances when plotting SPL vs frequency. Phase shift typically is in the valley between two peaks. These phase shifts are not correctable and further degrade the quality of any bass response/sound generated by such systems.
Further, it is virtually impossible to decouple the responses of commonly driven passive radiators mounted within an acoustic enclosure coupling acoustic energy into a common cavity located inside the acoustic enclosure as taught by Chick, et al. and Litovsky et al. Subtle sound pressure instabilities which develop in such systems both within the common acoustic enclosure and within the ported cavity that cause the surfaces of the passive radiators to wobble, as the part of the radiator is closer to the mouth (output port) experiences higher forces than the part farther away from the mouth (output port), causing phase delineation that effectively degrades the bass response. (See also the discussion in the specifications of the respective cited Chick, et al. & Litovsky et al patents relative to
Prior art acoustic enclosures, which employ one or more passive radiator that have a vibrating surface which seals between and is in communication with an acoustic enclosure on one side and a space connected by a passage through a mouth that opening to atmospheric pressure outside the sealed acoustic enclosure; will wobble generally about an axis 90 degree to the central axis of the mouth. Such wobble generates audible distortion and potential reduction in the excursion (amplitude) of the passive radiators. Wobble is visible, and common, in all prior art where the stiff part of the passive radiator have a center of gravity that is fixed; in the middle of the cone or the radiating surface.
Embodiments according to this invention can be used in any sealed enclosure with an active radiating surface. Just by mounting a module according to this invention into one of the walls, the active radiating surface will charge the air spring which pushes on the passive radiator surface thereafter. Furthermore, embodiments according to this invention allow the active module to be distant from and embedded internally (buried) within the enclosure and to use a duct of the module to transport and guide the pressure wave from the passive radiators to an opening in one of the walls of the enclosure to atmospheric pressure surrounding the enclosure. This module can also be used in home audio as a retrofit. Users can use the space between ceiling joists to mount a module according to the invention in the ceiling (or floor). The woofer would then also be mounted between the ceiling or floor joists so that it drives the passive radiator using pressure waves in the closed speaker enclosure space bounded at least partially by the ceiling or floor joists. A method according to this invention provides mounting an active driver with a passive radiator on the same module and then fitting the module between the ceiling or floor joists of a house. This installation method allows a home owner to enjoy enhanced bass sound from otherwise wasted space.
Embodiments according to the current invention are extensions of the previous work of the inventor herein with passive radiators.
A low cost/high efficiency passive radiator module component includes: a ported cavity structure adapted for placement inside an acoustic enclosure with a port communicating out of the acoustic enclosure; and one or more essentially congruent pairs of passive radiators symmetrically oriented and supported on opposing side walls of the ported cavity each having a predetermined mass distribution, stiff acoustic radiating diaphragm surfaces and spaced apart inner suspensions/outer suspensions configured for suppressing wobble that induces each pair to symmetrically vibrate inertially responsive to variable acoustic pressure pulses radiated by an active acoustic radiator within the acoustic enclosure for radiating different variable acoustic pressure pulses inside and outside the ported cavity.
Another embodiment of a high efficiency passive radiator module component includes: a horn structure having a throat section inside an acoustic enclosure and mouth section communicating out of the acoustic enclosure; and one or more essentially congruent pairs of passive radiators symmetrically oriented and supported on opposing side walls of the horn structure each having a predetermined mass distribution that induces each pair to symmetrically vibrate inertially responsive to variable acoustic pressure pulses radiated by an active acoustic radiator within the acoustic enclosure for radiating different variable acoustic pressure pulses inside and outside the ported cavity.
Low cost/high efficiency passive radiator module components include horn loading techniques that can be added to any acoustic enclosure that allow the end user to change the magnitude and location of the center of gravity of the mass moving in one or more passive radiators based on their applications and need. A system according to the invention can have the air mass between the moving surface(s) of the one or more passive radiators in communication with (fire) into (and through) a horn loaded tunnel which compounds the bass and lower the resonance frequency even further.
In horn-loaded modules that do not use passive radiators that are not symmetrically in communication with atmospheric pressure using a symmetrical suspension, wobble emanates from a nonlinear sound pressure differential that favors the half of (portion of) the vibrating surface area of the passive radiator that is closer to (a shorter distance from) the portion of the acoustic passage in communication with atmospheric pressure. Such wobble causes acoustic distortion as well as a reduction in the useful Xmax of the passive radiator. By adding an inertial mass, IM to a stiff acoustic radiating diaphragm of the passive (this mass is positioned to offset the center of gravity of the moving diaphragm a certain predetermined distance in the direction along the axis of the acoustic passage in communication with atmospheric pressure toward the mouth open to atmosphere, e.g., the half side of the passive radiator face (vibrating surface) proximate to the mouth is equal to ½ the inertial air mass loading, IAML/2, at the mouth, so that the location of the center of gravity is offset from the geometric center of the vibrating surface of the radiating diaphragm, so that such offset of the center of gravity acts to equalize the offset load created by the air mass moving only to and from in one lateral direction (side) of the passive radiator in communication with the mouth to thereby dampen a laterally induced wobble created by the air mass load coming and emanating in only one lateral direction.
In another embodiment a passive radiator module component has a tubular (e.g., cylindrical) configuration with a hemispherical end cap sealing the end of the tube to reduce turbulence in the airflow generated. When installed in an acoustical enclosure, the passive radiator module component, having the tube will radiate sound within the tube to the outside of the acoustic enclosure based on the expanding/collapsing walls (one or more passively vibrating surfaces) of the module. Further, a through acoustic enclosure, a tube having its internal surface open to atmosphere at both ends and sealing the openings in the acoustic enclosure through which the tube extends and having its external surface exposed to the sealed space of the acoustic enclosure, tubular configuration (arrangement) can be utilized. Such tubular configuration passive radiator arrangements can replace a standard open ended tubular port with a one end closed or a through tube sealed between the acoustically sealed enclosure and the atmospheric pressure that radiates sound by moving partial arc cylindrically shape matching surface on the side of the tube such that a curved geometry of the suspensions of the moving partial arc cylindrically shape matching surfaces damps wobble of the acoustically radiating surfaces of the passive. The tubular passive radiator module component can have a hexahedral shape.
Another feature of a passive radiator module component is that it permits an isolation plane between the two or more radiating surfaces to assist in mitigating frequency phase delineation due to rear wave refection in the (acoustic enclosure/module).
In particular, passive radiators are never identical in compliance or environmental loading. Each passive acoustic radiator in a common acoustic enclosure inherently has different resonance frequency. A speaker box with one radiating surface, a woofer, has one pole, when having two radiating surfaces, two poles, and three surfaces, three poles. An audio sweep plotting frequencies vs. impedance, produces peak impedances that correlate to the driving active acoustic radiator (normal) and one for each passive radiator in the in the enclosure. Such systems have additional poles (radiating surfaces or directions) that produce phase shifts between the peaks that compromise the quality of the frequency response of the system. Such phase shifts are not correctable. Hence adding an isolation plane between the two or more radiating surfaces reduces this action-reaction effect.
Another advantage of the described high efficiency passive radiator module component is that passive radiators with different masses are possible, which may be useful in mechanically vibrating systems, but generally consistent with improved audio quality and amplitude as achieved and discussed herein.
As illustrated in
Offset positions 166, 166A, 166B are accomplished by simply rotating the tuning the mass 160 about the bolt 161 and tightening the nut . . . .
The passive module shown in
The plot 249 demonstrates the fact that the peak impedances 246, 247 are detected at different frequency values. The design of
While the invention has been described With regard to specific embodiments, those skilled in the art will recognize that changes can be made in form and detail without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
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